“…Since that time, numerous seismic experiments along the fast-spreading East Pacific Rise (EPR) have combined to make it the most extensively studied ridge in the world. They include refraction experiments (ROSE [Bratt and Purdy, 1984;Ewing and Purdy, 1982;Purdy, 1982;Fischer and Purdy, 1986], MAGMA [McClain et al, 1985], EXCO and tomographic studies [Burnett et al, 1989;Toomey et al, 1990;Caress et al, 1992;Toomey et al, 1994]), single-ship multichannel seismics (MCS) Harding et al, 1993;Kent et al, 1994;Carbotte et al, 1997;Hooft et al, 1997a], two-ship wide aperture profiles (WAP) [Vera and Diebold, 1994;Kappus et al, 1995], two-ship expanding spread profiles (ESP) [Harding et al, 1989;Vera et al, 1990], and, more recently, on-bottom seismics [Christeson et al, 1992[Christeson et al, , 1996. In combination, these methods have been a powerful tool in our effort to understand the structure of upper oceanic crust.…”